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Canada isn’t the moral haven some want to claim it is

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Statues like that of George Vancouver shows that Canada has its own history of problematic icons. Photo by: Zhatt, courtesy of Wikipedia

By: Madeleine Chan, Staff Writer

A few weeks ago, #MeanwhileInCanada was trending on Twitter with people comparing the anti-racism protests (fronted by George Floyd’s murder) to the supposed non-existence of similar racialized police violence in Canada. The hashtag has since been rightfully flooded with the many valid examples of Canada’s long and continuing history of racist violence and oppression, which should be realized and understood by everyone.

Recent examples of this violence just in the last month have included the suspicious death of Regis Korchinski-Paquet, a Black woman, in Toronto after police were called to her apartment. Indigenous woman Chantel Moore was also shot and killed in New Brunswick by police during a “wellness check.” And these are just the recent ones. Black Lives Matter protests in Montreal have shown that Canadian police are not above tear gassing and pepper spraying peaceful protesters.

The most blatant example of Canada’s racial injustice is the fact that, like the US, as settlers we are living on stolen land, a product of the centuries-long history of colonial violence and assimilation. This includes the creation of the RCMP, which from its inception was meant to police Indigenous people. This practice continues in the sheer amount of unnecessary force and unlawful trespass from the RCMP that occured when the Wet’suwet’en people were defending and continue to defend their land in northern BC from an unsanctioned pipeline.

I could write an entire A to Z encyclopedia on this topic and only cover a fraction of Canada’s racism. The point is that rhetoric like “At least that’s not us” and “Things are different in Canada” does nothing but ignore the deep systemic racism that lies in Canada’s roots. It is there, and it is real. It’s just hidden underneath a country-wide marketing campaign that began with the 1971 policy that posited Canada as a magical and multicultural place. Just as the US brands itself through the idea of “freedom,” Canada brands itself as “multicultural” to hide its current and continuing history of racist transgressions. This erasure of violence and discrimination in this country is in itself yet another thing to add to Canada’s list of systemic racism. 

One could argue that the aforementioned incidents of police brutality are perpetrated by only a few “bad apples.” But that not only ignores the centuries of colonial oppression, it also denies the statistical data that says Indigenous people make up 5% of the population but represent 36% of people killed by the RCMP, or that Black citizens in Toronto are 20 times more likely than white citizens to be killed by police.

Arguing that “Yes, there is racism here, but it is less than in the US” excuses the racism that we have. To compare two countries’ “levels” of racism is to permit one “level” simply because it is lesser. No amount of racism should be acceptable in any country. We are no better than the US just because our history of racism is guised under a thin veil of carefully branded multiculturalism. We are no better just because maybe the police shoot fewer bullets at civilians. Both countries are built on racism and continue to run on it and there should be no rationalizing for that.

The strong solidarity for the Black Lives Matter movement across borders over the past few weeks solidifies this connection. The outpouring of support both on social media and in protests shows that people recognize the systemic seeds that were planted long ago and continue to grow in both countries. We need to continue this solidarity for people to recognize that racism doesn’t stop at a border — if anything, borders only perpetuate it.

Dismissing the US as the only place where racism happens ignores its real and continuing history in Canada. We do not have the moral high ground over the United States, or any country for that matter. I encourage you to educate yourself on the realities of Candadian history and find ways to fight the roots that still strangle people of colour, especially Black and Indigenous people, so that here in the north we can truly be strong and free.

 

Militant Mothers of Raymur mosaic commemorates the collective action of a once-working class neighbourhood

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A group of courageous working class mothers fought for their children’s right to safety. PHOTO: Courtesy of icelandpenny.

By: Meera Eragoda, Arts & Culture Editor

Since the start of COVID-19 restrictions, I’ve been taking walks around Strathcona, and though the restrictions have eased now, I’ve been continuing that practice. Aside from being good for my mental health, being exposed to all the murals that are around there has helped expose me to the hidden history of this neighbourhood. One piece that stands out, even in its unobtrusiveness, is a mosaic on the corner of Campbell and Keefer which commemorates the Militant Mothers of Raymur.

Strathcona is Vancouver’s oldest residential neighbourhood, and though now mostly gentrified, used to be home to many immigrants and working class people — including a large Black population. According to Black Strathcona, “At its height in [the] 1940s, the black population in Strathcona was approximately eight hundred.” Though this number was quite significant, the city of Vancouver launched a united and unfortunately successful effort to displace these Black Vancouverites from Strathcona in order to build the Georgia Viaduct.

The Militant Mothers of Raymur mosaic commemorates one of the remaining, tangible aspects of the working class neighbourhood, the Militant Mothers of Raymur Overpass. In 1968, the City of Vancouver built Raymur Housing, a social housing project for low-income families. This housing was located on Keefer Street right next to the railway, and the children living there attended Admiral Seymour School only a couple of blocks away. The social housing still exists today, under the name Stamps Place and under the administration of a non-profit, New Chelsea Society.

Though the walk to school was short, it was dangerous. The children had to wait for any trains to pass before crossing or they had to risk scrambling across the train — which was slow but still moving — to get to the otherside. Many of the mothers living in Raymur Housing were single mothers who, fearing for their children’s safety, wrote many letters to government and railway officials. 

The mothers petitioned and demanded change, but of course, given their working class roots, the officials completely disregarded their wishes and their children’s safety. In addition, since they were women in the 1970s, this docked additional points from their cause. 

Eventually in 1971, 25 of the mothers decided to block the railway until a solution was found. Amongst them was Carolyn Jerome, a Black mother and one of the leaders of the fight. They blocked the railway once in January and in response, the railway officials promised not to run trains during peak school hours. This was a promise they broke quickly enough that the mothers were back protesting again in March — this time for three days and two nights, prepared with tents.

In an interview with the Vancouver Sun, Jerome recalls the experience being frightening, “When the trains are rumbling on the track, you can really feel them in your body.” She also recounted how the railway conductors would hurl insults at them, calling them lazy and using welfare as an insult. The mothers persevered and CN Railway promptly served them with injunctions.

Their long-fought battle was finally won when the court sided with them and required CN Rail to build an overpass. This is now the green overpass which was named the Keefer Street Pedestrian Overpass. It was renamed in 2019 to commemorate the mothers, though the plaque on the overpass only credits Judith Stainsby by name, effectively contributing to the erasure of an aspect of Black history in an area that once had a substantial Black presence.

Hogan’s Alley Society is a non-profit whose goal is to “daylight the presence of Black history in Vancouver and throughout British Columbia.” They are definitely an organization worth checking out, and if you’re able to, donating to.

National security law for Hong Kong approved by China

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Photo: Tyrone Siu / Reuters. Protestors gather in Hong Kong on May 24, 2020.

Written by: Michelle Young, Staff Writer

China has approved a new bill to criminalize secession, subversion, terrorism, and foreign interference in Hong Kong. The law has yet to be drafted, as the process is expected to take a few months. Carrie Lam, the Chief Executive of Hong Kong, stated that the new bill will “ensure prosperity and stability to Hong Kong.” 

The new law was met with harsh criticism upon its proposal earlier in May. Critics of the new law worry that it will effectively end the “one country, two systems” framework that guaranteed Hong Kong’s autonomy after the handover to China in 1997. 

Days after the drafted bill was announced, thousands of pro-democracy protestors took to the streets to protest the proposed security law. According to the Hong Kong Police Force, protesters were violent towards officers. The protests resulted in the use of tear gas and water cannons by Hong Kong’s Police Force, who also stated via Twitter that they “express the strongest condemnation against the riotous acts.”

Lam also noted that the new law “will not affect one country, two systems” and will “protect the rights” of Hong Kong citizens. However, some expressed concern under the belief that their freedoms will be limited. Pro-democracy activists, such as Joshua Wong, have condemned the bill, publicly stating that it is “just the prelude to more oppressive controls.”

The national security bill comes after a year of political unrest in Hong Kong, and Lam stated that it would only affect those involved in terrorism or subversion. While she stressed that Hong Kong’s freedoms will remain, she also stated that “rights and freedoms are not absolute.” 

Back in 2003, Article 23 of Hong Kong’s mini-constitution held a similar sentiment, however, it was never put into place due to an extremely unpopular response — half a million protested against it. 

There was also public dissent against the drafted bill in Vancouver, as hundreds went to the Chinese Consulate to protest. Regarding the proposal, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has stated that it is “important for the Chinese government to engage in constructive conversations with citizens of Hong Kong.” Canada, the US, the UK, and Australia signed a joint statement condemning the law of breaching the Sino-British Joint Declaration — an agreement between Britain and China that allowed China to take back Hong Kong, under the condition that it would remain “unchanged,” including Hong Kong’s high degree of autonomy. However, these concerns have been dismissed by China as mere “meddling.” 

A number of Canadian universities, including the University of British Columbia (UBC) and the University of Toronto (UofT), have faced backlash for posting job listings for the Hong Kong Police Force. The advertisements posted positions inviting those who have the ability to “take command of a situation” to apply. In a joint statement, activists wrote that the listings are “complicit in human rights violations in Hong Kong by aiding and abetting perpetrators of state violence,” and called for the postings to be removed. In response to the critique of these listings, some universities, such as UBC and UofT stated that it is the choice of the student on whether or not they wish to apply. Others, such as McMaster University have removed the advertisements. 

Lam has stressed that Hong Kong’s freedoms will remain intact and that those who are concerned about the new proposal should wait until the details are released. 

MUJI’s virtual bullet journal workshop demonstrates that journalling doesn’t need to be perfect

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MUJI’s bullet journal workshop offered a way to finesse those bullet journalling skills. Courtesy of MUJI Canada.

By: Michelle Young, Staff Writer

Amongst all the COVID-19 isolation, various companies have shifted their in-person services to make them accessible to customers from home. MUJI, a department store known for their stationary, hosted a bullet journal workshop via Zoom with bullet journalist and calligrapher, Vanessa Yu. The workshop was about half an hour, and Yu provided the attendees with tips on how to organize or start their bullet journals for better organization. 

The workshop did not require a webcam or microphone from attendees, and the only interactive aspect was a live Q&A, where questions were handpicked by a MUJI representative and directed to Yu. Attendees asked her about the best pens, notebooks, and paper to use. She compared brush pens to gel pens, spiral bound to flat notebooks, and lined to blank paper — though she ultimately concluded that the beauty in bullet journalling was its flexibility. In that instant, I was overwhelmed with the detail that went into bullet journalling. The tools that people sought out for it seemed to be incredibly particular, so I  was surprised when Yu emphasized function over aesthetic. 

I’ve always thought bullet journalling was an intimidating task. Instagrammers, YouTubers, and Studyblrs (Tumblr blogs that focus on note-taking and organization) often post photos of beautiful pages filled with calligraphy, stickers, and some strategically placed pens on the side. While I love stationery and I’m always on a quest to find new notebooks and washi tapes, I never tried to make my journals look too perfect. The bullet journals I saw on social media looked like they took so much time to lay out and I couldn’t imagine working so hard for my planner every week I always felt that bullet journalling was more of an art form, rather than an organization skill. Of course, it can be both, though Yu noted that bullet journaling “shouldn’t take more time than you’re comfortable with.” 

Suggestions for bullet journals included keeping and updating an index, using different bullets for different kinds of tasks, and noting observations and reminders. I can only assume that Yu illustrated how she sets up her journals on camera, because the screen blacked out on my laptop and I didn’t receive a response from the hosts. The workshop was a mere 30 minutes, and I figured by the time I had sorted my Zoom issues, there wouldn’t be much time left and I would have missed the majority of the event. 

As I listened, I found that the workshop had a very methodical approach to bullet journalling such as an emphasis on creating a key for different kinds of bullets, numbering pages, and updating an index. While this was interesting in itself, I would have enjoyed tips on how to place washi tapes, or how to improve our handwriting or other visual suggestions — even though the workshop was centred on organization. 

The workshop left us with a downloadable PDF illustrating a variety of different bullet shapes that could be used to organize our journals. Yu concluded by discussing how bullet journalling can be a form of self-care and how laying out spreads can be therapeutic. Though I was disappointed with the technical issues and lack of aesthetic-oriented tips, the workshop aided in taking away some of the pressure that came with planning a bullet journal. Perhaps now I’ll be more willing to experiment in my planner without the expectation of it looking perfect. 

MUJI Canada offers a variety of workshops to participate in on their facebook page. The next one is “Learn the Basics of Coffee Brewing” on June 13. If you’ve always wanted to learn the difference between different kinds of coffee, this is your chance.

Creative Writing minor to launch at SFU this fall

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Photo Courtesy of SFU Department of English

Written by: Paige Riding, News Writer

On the evening of May 25, around 50 attendees joined together over Zoom to celebrate the upcoming launch of SFU’s new creative writing minor. The program, available starting this fall, will eventually replace the Creative Writing Certificate previously offered by the English department.

David Coley, Associate Professor and Undergraduate/Associate Chair in the English department, spoke with The Peak over email about what the minor will entail and how it differs from the preceding certificate. As well as the change in the number of credits needed for completion and specific courses being required for the minor, Coley emphasized two defining differences from the certificate.

“The minor is significantly more streamlined and flexible than the certificate, meaning that students who don’t necessarily want to be English majors but do want to study Creative Writing can do so more easily.” Additionally, those in English programs can choose to take these creative writing courses as part of their major or minor.

While the certificate made studying creative writing outside of the English program possible, the courses and prerequisites, according to Coley made it “harder than it should have been”. 

Coley noted that the second difference from the certificate is “the introduction of the gateway course for the minor, English 272” The second-level required course titled “Creative Reading” will be the first second-level creative writing course at SFU. According to the professor, it will introduce the creative and critical model at the center of the Creative Writing program.

David Chariandy, Clint Burnham, and Steve Collis, SFU’s permanent creative writing faculty, will also be joined by visiting faculty member Carleigh Baker for the upcoming year. 

“Carleigh is a wonderful writer and a wonderful teacher, and we are extremely lucky to have her join us,” wrote Coley. “She will offer a different critical and pedagogical voice for our students, one that complements and augments our permanent creative writing faculty.

“Taken together, these faculty members are an extraordinary group. Our department and our students are fortunate to have gathered them all under one (currently virtual) roof.”

The faculty, along with some students and alumni, all read excerpts of their own creative writing during the soft launch. There were various poems and prose read aloud in the Zoom party. Chariandy presented a book prologue. Student Alyssa Bridgman presented poems written on an unconventional surface — leaves. 

“The model we’re pursuing is unique in that it focuses on the intersection of critical thought and creative practice. This creates a richer intellectual and practical working environment for our students,” Coley said.

When asked what he would say to anyone interested in the creative writing minor, Coley said such students should “take advantage of it while you have the opportunity. The new minor, the new gateway course, the brilliant addition of Carleigh as a visiting faculty member, the ongoing presence of our writer-in-residence program — there is a lot of energy in the creative writing program and in the English department as a whole.”

“You will not BELIEVE what my 5-year old succulent did today!”: a plant mommy blog

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Photo courtesy of Stephanie Harvey via Unsplash

By: Hannah Davis, Peak Associate 

Hey fellow Succies! I hope you like that name I’ve coined for all you fellow plant mommies!

Wow! Today has been a stressful week. My succulent turned 5-years old and the house was in chaos trying to organize a celebration for her! She never ceases to amaze me in regards to how much she can do at such a young age; I know that her development is far beyond any other succulent who has ever lived to be 5 years old! 

I know you’ve all been enamoured with my little sweet succulent and alllllll the splendid things she can do, I decided to keep track of it all for the next week and share it with you!!!

Day 2

My succulent drank up two full litres of water today! Talk about a thirsty girl!

Day 3

When I went to water my girl today, she said “thank you mommy, I am so thankful for you!” That’s pretty impressive for a 5-year old! I’ve read many plant development books and the expected age for a succulent to start talking is… never… so my girl is way ahead of the game!

Later, my amazement was quickly dashed when my girl was missing! I left the room for a moment and when I came back, the sill where she usually sits was empty and my succulent, vanished!

She re-appeared a few hours later, back on the sill, after giving me a terrible scare! Dave must have taken her out for a little while without letting me know!

Day 4

Today I woke up to my succulent having made me breakfast in bed. I’ve never even taught her how to use the stove! A culinary protege! She even made me a mimosa because mama needs her juice!

I went outside after breakfast to get the paper and found one of my outdoor succulents torn up from the roots and laying on my porch doormat… Who did this? A raccoon? A squirrel? I carefully planted this succulent back in the rock garden. 

Later, I added yummy fertilizer to my succulent’s pot, temporarily moving her into a different planter. When I went to transplant her back into the original pot, she stood up, looked at me, and said, “It’s okay mommy, I do it, you work too hard for me already” and she walked her little plant legs right up to the other pot and plopped herself right back into the new soil!

I can’t believe how thoughtful my girl is!

Day 5

I woke up first thing this morning and found a card… from my succulent! 

Dear mommy, you’re the best! I sure hope nothing bad ever happens to your garden…. Love, your indoor succulent.

I couldn’t believe it! My succulent knows how to read and write! I was so excited that I barely picked up on the thinly veiled threat!

Day 6

It’s the middle of the night… I saw my succulent stalking around the house with a shovel and a hand rake… Something strange is going on…

Day 7

Today I woke to scratching on my bedroom door. It was my succulent, still holding garden tools! I asked if she wanted some water and she said “Mommy you’re so thoughtful, and you work too hard, so I already got some water for myself!”

That’s when I heard flowing water… I ran to the bathroom to see…

…all my outdoor succulents floating in the overflowing bathtub, and everyone knows that succulents cannot be overwatered!!! I look at my girl who is standing in the bathroom doorway… She looks at me, “Mommy, I want all of your love. There can only be one.”

Wow… you will not believe what my 5-year old (succulent) did!

CONFESSIONAL: I just can’t stop ending Zoom calls!

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Illustration of a closed envelope, with the text, “Confessionals”
ILLUSTRATION: Marissa Ouyang /The Peak

By: Madeleine Chan, Staff Writer

It started a few months ago, when everything ended. Face-to-face interaction, that is. I thought it was finally over, that I was free from the paralyzing prison of others’ eyes and the mortifying ordeal of being seen. But alas, for me to keep “participating” in society, people have to look at my face. 

It was May, and I was in my first class of the semester. All those countless people were constantly staring at me. Those bitchy resting faces . . . my true nightmare. I mean, if I were really digging so desperately for attention, I would have posted an update on the delayed progress of the SUB. But when we all began awkwardly waving our goodbyes at the end of class and I saw the “host has ended the session” message, it was pure relief. 

Suddenly, my nerves were replaced with straight butter. But not like that “real” shit — more like the free movie-theatre kind, the kind that dribbles out of the dispenser like apple juice. Sheer indulgence, it was, in the idea that I could now sit in a dark room amongst greasy food while doing nothing but watching YouTube videos on why the world isn’t round. 

Ever since that day, I’ve been sending out meeting invitations to chase that runaway feeling. I even changed my social media handles to match my meeting ID. I wait at my computer all day for people to join my call, I turn my camera on, I let them greet me first so I’m hit with that crippling fear of being seen. Wait a second so it really sinks in, then end the call. It’s one big juicy cycle of anxious release that I keep reaping serotonin from like a nervous farmer.

I knew I was obsessed when I realized that I couldn’t stop thinking about that little red button. It’s the only thing that’s providing me some sort of relief now that I can’t blissfully ignore the people trying to get me to join a club in the AQ. It’s gotten so bad that if I see a red button I’ll just press it. Whether it’s on the television remote, an unsaved Word document, or my snooze button, that sucker is going to be slapped.

I have to go now. I have 10 people waiting to join my meeting and I need to get through all of them before they lose their patience and leave again. But please, if you see a meeting ID or a link to join a Zoom call, help a person out and give me your face so I can be free of it.

Your weekly SFU horoscopes: June 8–14

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An illustration of a girl with long flowing hair. Astrological signs and stars shine around her.
ILLUSTRATION: Marissa Ouyang / The Peak

By: Paige Riding, News Writer

Aries: What is with your urge to fight everyone around you? Sure, you’re the shark in an ocean of guppies and all, but don’t forget the Finding Nemo mantra: fish are friends, not food. I doubt those around you like being called guppies, too. Sheesh. They’re butterflyfish, at worst.

Taurus: Make like a bull and charge forward this week, right through the walls you built up around yourself. You only created them to stop people from seeing you for the vulnerable creature you are: a person who really just misses the old Webkinz site.

Gemini: Which iconic Katy Perry lyric do you relate to most from her 2008 single “Hot N Cold”? Wait, don’t bother guessing. I’m pretty sure it’s all of them.

Cancer: I have good and bad news for you this time around. This will be a week of near-euphoric highs, but with those, you may feel the lowest of your dreary lows. But if we’re being honest, you’re really just an emotional wreck and all things hit you very hard all the time. This week is not different.

Leo: Work smarter, not harder, this week. Negative people around you might try to tell you about the insufficiency of playing Nintendogs rather than walking your dog or laying in the Corpse pose for a bit and calling it a great yoga session. Spend all that time you’re saving telling them they’re wrong and you’re right, like always.

Virgo: Perfectionism is, paradoxically, a flaw. You can keep trying to make everything around you adhere to your belief system. But by the time you’re finished, your typed-out, unsent comment to the group chat will be lost to a new subject, one that isn’t post-postmodernism.

Libra: Remember: as the middle sign of the Zodiac, you thrive in finding balance in life, Libra. Nah, not spiritually or physically or anything. You just chug a bunch of water after eating a three-course meal at 2 a.m. It’s all about balance.

Scorpio: Spend time learning more about your world. Hurt your own feelings by reading your favourite snack’s ingredients. Read a spam email and maybe even click its link to a free Bahamas trip for an exciting opportunity. Ask your family if they ever cheated during game nights and exile them accordingly.

Sagittarius: How have your friends responded to that hobby you persistently talk about? Hate to bear bad news, but their nods of interest aren’t what they seem, just as your determination to work at something until you see results isn’t quite working out. But keep insisting it is, I guess.

Capricorn: Try refraining from using a sarcastic remark to answer those around you this week. Who knows? You might actually hear someone else’s perspective in its entirety before you try proving it wrong. It’s simple quicksand logic — I know you love logistics. Appear harmless until it’s too late.

Aquarius: “Okay, boomer,” you’ll proclaim wittily into the internet abyss this week. You’ll then proceed to snuggle into your knitted blanket with your chamomile tea, furrowing your brows at the 12-year-olds on TikTok making more money than you ever will.

Pisces: Life is a marathon, not a race, Pisces. Take this week to collect yourself before running to help friends that wouldn’t do the same. It’s the martyr archetype you know well. Don’t say The Peak didn’t warn you.

Man texts “I miss you” to favourite public washroom, promises to hang out soon

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Written by Zach Siddiqui, Humour Editor

PORT MOODY, BC — On Saturday, Walter Tangke, a sociology major at SFU, decided to take a moment to check on his favourite public washroom over text message.

“Miss ur porcelain [sic],” he typed. “Ur invisible toilet paper. being able to shower the seats without being the one to sit in it later.”

Tangke has not seen his favourite washroom in months, given its location on Burnaby Mountain. Its best qualities include its janky tap, which used to give his critical thinking skills a much needed workout, along with its cracked mirror, which prevented him from having to ever confront himself physically or emotionally. He especially loved drying his hands on each stall’s heartwarming permanent-marker cartoons about communism and the Pusheen cat. 

Tangke is excited that British Columbia has finally moved into Phase 2 of restarting the province.

“Just really gotta stop by a few other places first,” he explained. “My favourite booth at Cactus Club, my favourite power outlet at the mall. But I swear I’m gonna hit up my OG room soon.”

Tangke noted that their friendship was “tumultuous,” with the washroom often giving him the cold shoulder, or as he put it, the cold seat. They had remained in each other’s thoughts throughout quarantine, though, with Tangke often flashing back to their 15-minute dissociation sessions together as he sat bored on the toilet. 

Tangke’s text to the washroom comes after 10 years of promising to organize his middle-school reunion.

Five queer-antine films for a virtual Pride Month

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Still from Boys Don't Cry. Image courtesy of Fox Searchlight.

By: Juztin Bello, Copy Editor

At the unfortunate news of Pride celebrations being cancelled across the world at the hands of COVID-19 (AKA Miss Rona), many have found themselves disheartened at the move to a virtual Pride. The Vancouver Pride Society itself announced back in April that Vancouver’s Pride celebration, typically held in August, would also be put on hold. Yes, I know what you’re all thinking and I fully agree: Miss Rona is definitely homophobic. 

SEE MORE: “Pride events may be cancelled, but being proud is not.”

However, the move to a virtual Pride Month does not mean we cannot celebrate queerness in different, less physical ways. One way is to celebrate the trials and journeys of the queer community through appreciating art dedicated to telling their stories. So, here is a list of five queer-centric films you should check out to keep Pride Month alive and running.

 

The Queen

Image courtesy of Grove Press.

For fans of RuPaul’s Drag Race, the documentary The Queen will contextualize the culture of pageant drag. Released in 1968, the film follows the Miss All-America Camp Beauty Contest, a pageant held in New York City. In between cuts of the contestants rehearsing choreography and trying on outfits and wigs, they discuss the struggles of a drag queen, such as being deemed too feminine to join the military and the discourse around gender reassignment surgery. 

The sisterhood shown in helping each other get into dresses and applying each other’s makeup is juxtaposed with the competitive side of the drag pageant world — a side which reveals itself in overdramatic breakdowns, petty arguments, and incredibly loud egos. Avid Drag Race fans may recognize the legendary Crystal LaBeija, who Season 9/All-Stars 3 contestant Aja impersonated for her All-Stars Snatch Game. Even for viewers who may not be well versed in Drag Race, the film is charmingly entertaining and very approachable to delve into the drag scene — trust me, the drama is so theatrical you can’t help but sit back and enjoy. 

Stream: Netflix

 

Boy Erased

Image courtesy of Focus Features.

Based off of Garrard Conley’s memoir of the same name, Boy Erased follows Jared Eamons as he is sent to a gay conversion therapy facility. While there, Jared confronts the pressure that comes with having a pastor for a father and a complacent mother who only wants “what’s best for him.” As a film that mirrors Conley’s life, Boy Erased provides a window into the broken homes that many LGBTQ2+ members are subjected to. It offers an accurate and heartwrenching display of the hardships some LGBTQ2+ youth face, without appropriating or romanticizing them. As someone whose parents were more accepting of my sexuality, this film gave me a clear sense of my own privilege  and put into perspective just how abusive conversion therapy is. I will warn that as a realistic depiction of conversion therapy, this movie contains triggering conversations and themes. 

Stream: Crave and Hulu
Purchase: $19.99 on YouTube and Google Play

 

The Normal Heart

Image courtesy of HBO.

Another film that was first literature, The Normal Heart follows writer Ned Weeks in New York City in the midst of the rising HIV-AIDS crisis from 1981 to 1984. The film shows Ned and his friends struggling with loss due to the crisis. Elucidated in the film is the reoccuring oppressive rejection by news outlets not wanting to cover a disease mostly impacting homosexual men. Being based on real-life events, the film shows viewers an accurate depiction of the anxiety, companionship, and heartbreak that befell many during such grave circumstances. While there is romance involved throughout various plots of the movie, it puts an appropriate amount of weight on how heartbreaking this pandemic truly was. One particularly moving scene shows the coming together of LGBTQ2+ members in the face of discrimination — a sentiment I think is extraordinarily significant at this time. 

Stream: Crave and Hulu
Rent: $3.99 (SD) and $4.99 (HD) on YouTube/Google Play
Purchase: $13.99 (SD) and $14.99 (HD) on YouTube/Google Play

 

Portrait of a Lady on Fire (Portrait de la jeune fille en feu)

Image courtesy of Lilies Films.

Right off the bat, I will say this film is appropriately titled because it was literal fire. This French film sees a forbidden affair begin between two women in late 18th century France. Painter Marianne is commissioned to paint a portrait of aristocrat Héloïse who is being married off to a Milanese nobleman. Héloïse finds that her bond with Marianne grows stronger as the two spend more time together, complicating the fact that Héloïse is expected to be married. 

Captivating in both cinematography and character chemistry, Portrait of a Lady on Fire truly brings to life the simultaneous thrill and sorrow that come with having someone light your fire, only for the presence of a man to put that out. As a non-traditional rom-com, I think this film captures the poetic injustice that sometimes accompanies falling in love as someone who is LGBTQ2+ and will have you wishing you were caught up in a whirlwind affair in 18th century France. If the plot isn’t enough, just look at the dresses in the film, they define elegance and I need one now. 

Stream: Hulu
Rent: $4.99 on YouTube and Google Play, $5.99 (HD) on YouTube
Purchase: $9.99 on Google Play, $12.99 (HD) on YouTube

 

Boys Don’t Cry

Image courtesy of Fox Searchlight.

Despite this film being called Boys Don’t Cry, I sure as hell did watching it. The film is based off the real life story of Brandon Teena, a trans man, and follows his journey to find both himself and love. As Brandon traverses several hardships as a trans man, the film represents the strength that comes with continually facing oppression on the journey toward honing one’s identity. 

Ultimately, this film doesn’t sugarcoat just how horrifically trans people are treated, and doesn’t rely on comedy or romance to give the main character presence and agency. Although this film was released in 1999, Boys Don’t Cry depicts several of the challenges the trans community continues to face today. Scenes in this movie display the disrespectful and immoral reality of blatant misgendering, hate crimes, and the lack of sympathy from people who do not wish to get involved in trans-related violence. While there are a few gruesome scenes, these offer a lens into the reality many trans people face on a day-to-day basis, and are truthfully significant to acknowledge and watch. 

Stream: Crave and Hulu
Rent: $4.99 on Google Play
Purchase: $9.99 on Google Play